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Hollywood Graded Entries

Posted on 2012.05.26 at 19:27

Post Time: 10:00 p.m.

FIRST-6 fur; $27,000; clm($16,000); 3YO

PN Horse, Wt.

Jockey

Last 3

Odds

6 ISenseYourLckL120

JTalam

2-2-1

8-5

2 SondeAmericaL118

EFlores

7-4-6

3-1

1 AttacktheJack(L118

EMldnd

4-11-5

7-2

3 Real Dream(L),118

MGarci

4-5-5

10-1

4 Arinyes Love(L),118

CSthrln

3-1-3

4-1

5 Sea ofDesire(L),118

JSteinr

1-7-x

10-1

SECOND-6 fur; $24,000; clm($12,500); 3up

PN Horse, Wt.

Jockey

Last 3

Odds

3 Miss Oops(L),120

CSthrln

1-1-3

8-5

5 LilMissMacky(L)124

JTalam

1-5-8

9-5

1 Folk Dancer(L),120

ADlgdll

1-3-4

4-1

2 WoodmansLssL122

IPuglisi

1-5-3

5-1

4 RomanCharity(L120

AQnnz

3-11-7

10-1

6 Soldier Betty(L),120

OFigur

6-6-7

20-1

THIRD-6 fur; $52,000; mdn; 3up

PN Horse, Wt.

Jockey

Last 3

Odds

2 D' Obsession(L),118

MPedrz

6-4-x

3-1

4 Sizzlin' Joe(L),118

RBejrn

2-x-x

5-2

1 NightBadger(L),118

JTalam

4-x-x

7-2

3 Mel's Game(L),118

MSmth

7-x-x

7-2

5 Best Ransom(L),118

JVldvJr

x-x-x

15-1

6 Deep Play(L),118

DFlores

x-x-x

8-1

7 Jolly Joseph(L),124

ADlgdll

8-x-x

10-1

FOURTH-6 fur; $40,000; clm($40,000); 3up

PN Horse, Wt.

Jockey

Last 3

Odds

2 ClosetotheEdgL124

RBejrn

5-1-6

2-1

7 Privilaged(L),120

AQnnz

1-4-4

5-2

1 ScofieldBrrcksL120

MSmth

3-3-2

6-1

3 Luckarack(L),120

MGtrrz

7-3-2

3-1

4 Palio Prince(L),120

JTalam

5-2-3

6-1

5 WarrensKncktL120

VEspnz

6-3-6

12-1

6 HollywoodHestL120

MGarci

6-5-4

20-1

FIFTH-6 fur(T); $33,000; clm($25,000); 3up

PN Horse, Wt.

Jockey

Last 3

Odds

5 ChurchAvenueL120

DFlores

2-1-1

3-1

1 Ms. G. I. Jane(L),122

JTalam

1-6-3

7-2

2 BrazilianChrmL120

FLencld

12-5-1

15-1

3 Fifth Ave(L),120

VEspnz

4-10-6

9-2

4 HalfapondarosL117

EFlores

6-1-2

8-1

6 Hakuchi(L),120

ADlgdll

6-2-2

6-1

7 After Later(L),120

RBejrn

1-4-3

8-1

8 Mona Storm(L),122

KKriggr

3-5-3

6-1

9 FinalityPhilly(L),120

MGtrrz

6-8-5

12-1

SIXTH-5 1/2 fur; $30,000; clm($50,000); 3up

PN Horse, Wt.

Jockey

Last 3

Odds

8 SuddenSundayL118

JTalam

x-x-x

3-1

1 NataliesAcdmyL118

RBejrn

4-2-7

7-2

2 RichinTraditionL118

ADlgdll

5-5-x

12-1

3 FullsFigurehedL117

JRosari

6-x-x

5-1

4 AllswelloncegnL113

EFlores

7-7-x

4-1

5 Aunt Gert(L),122

MPedrz

5-9-x

6-1

6 Dulcemia(L),118

AQnnz

9-2-x

20-1

7 FlytoFreedom(L118

J Scott

x-x-x

20-1

9 ToomanytomtsL118

MGarci

x-x-x

6-1

SEVENTH-1 mile(T); $54,000; alw; 3up(f)

PN Horse, Wt.

Jockey

Last 3

Odds

1 RuffledFeathrsL124

MPedrz

7-3-9

8-1

8 Carrie Rose(L),122

MSmth

2-4-3

3-1

2 Grasp(L),124

CSthrln

3-2-2

12-1

3 Elana Mar(L),124

DFlores

5-1-10

4-1

4 DonnerWasserL124

RBejrn

3-1-3

5-1

5 ShwhmstbbydL117

JTalam

1-2-7

4-1

6 UnusualHottie(L113

KKriggr

2-2-1

7-2

7 BonitaSonadorL124

DVergr

7-6-6

20-1

EIGHTH-6 fur; $20,000; clm($20,000); 3up

PN Horse, Wt.

Jockey

Last 3

Odds

10 HiddenQuest(L),118

KKriggr

2-3-2

2-1

2 ThreeLittlBrdsL124

JTalam

4-8-x

5-2

1 DestinedJornyL122

S Arias

5-4-8

20-1

3 WarrensBigGldL124

OFigur

4-6-14

20-1

4 El Guapo(L),118

GGtrrz

7-9-x

30-1

5 Deposition(L),118

J Scott

9-x-x

30-1

6 Nobyjo(L),113

EFlores

4-7-5

6-1

7 Affrettando(L),118

JVldvJr

x-x-x

10-1

8 Navy SealSix(L),118

MPedrz

3-4-5

6-1

9 Outta Splash(L),122

AQnnz

6-2-6

5-1

3upPN Horse, Horse, fur, clm

Nypost.com


Messier answered with his words, then goals

Posted on 2012.05.25 at 23:24

It came out of the blue from the Blueshirts captain, Mark Messier’s guarantee the Rangers would win Game 6, which he fulfilled with a hat trick 18 years ago tonight in a performance that will live forever in Rangers lore.

Those Rangers were in disarray, the Presidents Trophy winners reeling by being pushed to the edge of elimination by two straight Devils victories in the 1994 Eastern Conference finals.

Star defenseman Brian Leetch and Messier had been benched in Game 4 by coach Mike Keenan, whose claim Leetch was injured was denied by Leetch. After they also lost Game 5, the Rangers needed a rallying point, and Messier provided an ultimate one.

POST TIME: Mark Messier’s guarantee turned into one of The Post’s most famous back pages when he backed it later that night with a hat trick against Martin Brodeur and the Devils.

These were the 1994 Rangers who had won their first league regular-season championship in 50 years in 1992, only to lose to the reigning Stanley Cup champion Penguins that spring. They were built precisely to end the 54-year Cup drought.

These Rangers underwent a massive trade-deadline makeover that saw them deal away scoring ace Mike Gartner and rising star Tony Amonte to bring in Glenn Anderson, Brian Noonan and Stephane Matteau, among others.

They massacred their main rivals at the time, the Islanders, 22-3, in a first-round sweep, and lost once to the Capitals in the second round. Then suddenly, the champs awaiting only coronation were in chaos, on the verge of ouster by the upstarts from the swamp and their yet-uncrowned Rookie of the Year goalie, Martin Brodeur.

That day, Messier strode into the locker room at the Rangers’ Rye Playland practice rink to meet the press, perhaps a dozen ink-stained wretches. As patchy memory serves, he stood in front of me and I asked, “What has to happen for this team to come back?”

Messier didn’t answer that insipid question directly.

Instead ...

“We’re going to go in there and win Game 6,” Messier responded. “We know we’re going to go in and win Game 6 and bring it back for Game 7.”

It could have been anyone, in fact it might have been anyone asking, so disconnected were the question and the response. I believe the question could have been “What color is the sky today?” and Messier would have given the same answer.

That moment passed almost unnoticed as he handled more intelligent questions with more in-depth answers, but that quiet certainty, and his hat-trick fulfillment of it the next night, created a legend that still lives large in Rangers lore, and haunts the Devils.

Mark Messier, Rangers, Rangers, Brian Leetch, Martin Brodeur, Eastern Conference, hat trick, Glenn Anderson, Mike Keenan, Brian Noonan, Stephane Matteau, Devils

Nypost.com


Patz Suspect Long Lived a Quiet Life

Posted on 2012.05.25 at 03:24

MAPLE SHADE, N.J.—In almost every way, Pedro Hernandez has been an unremarkable presence in this working-class town outside Camden. Neighbors said he lives quietly with his wife and daughter, joins them at church occasionally and rarely emerges from his small bungalow apartment except to smoke a cigarette now and then.

That changed on Thursday, when Mr. Hernandez was arrested in connection with the murder of 6-year-old Etan Patz, one of the most famous unsolved crimes in modern New York City history. Etan vanished while walking to school on May 25, 1979, and although several suspects surfaced over the decades, no one had been charged criminally.

New York Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said Thursday that authorities have arrested Pedro Hernandez for the murder of Etan Patz almost 33 years ago. Photo: AP.

New York Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said the 51-year-old Mr. Hernandez confessed under questioning this week to luring the boy into the basement of a Manhattan convenience store where he worked as a stock clerk, strangling him and discarding the body in the trash.

Prosecutors hadn't filed charges as of Thursday evening. It couldn't be determined if Mr. Hernandez had retained a lawyer.

A spokeswoman for Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. declined to comment.

The potential for an extraordinary development in a decades-old cold case drew throngs of reporters to Mr. Hernandez's home, shattering the anonymity of the tree-lined neighborhood.

More

Suspect Arrested in Patz Case

"He's the kind of neighbor everybody should have," said next-door neighbor Chuck Diehn, a retired police officer. "He doesn't make any noise. You never hear from him. That was it."

"You wouldn't even know he was here, other than he would come out and have a cigarette," Mr. Diehn added. "A church mouse would be too loud."

The one indulgence the family seemed to enjoy were parties of 10 to 15 people in the backyard during the warm weather in the cellar when it was cooler.

Neighbors said Mr. Hernandez didn't appear to be employed. Mr. Kelly said he has been on disability since 1993, when he was injured while working in construction.

Early Wednesday, Mr. Diehn noticed odd activity at his neighbor's house. From his living room, he saw several local and unmarked police cars outside Mr. Hernandez's home.

An officer from the Maple Shade Police Department went to the door, and a few moments later Mr. Hernandez and his family walked with the officer to an unmarked police car. "There wasn't any expression on his face," Mr. Diehn said. "They just walked him to the police car and put him in the police car."

View Slideshow

[SB10001424052702304707604577424363967134078]

Rob Bennett for The Wall Street Journal

In April of this year, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and New York Police Department descended upon an apartment building near the corner of Wooster and Prince streets in Manhattan's Soho neighborhood, half a block from the Patzes' house.

Gilbert Lopez, who identified himself as a brother-in-law of Mr. Hernandez, said in an interview at his home in Camden that the suspect is one of about 12 children. Their mother died about seven years ago, and with her death, the family's large Thanksgiving gatherings came to an end.

Mr. Lopez, 45 years old, said he was shaken by the news of his brother-in-law's arrest, saying he has "always been a nice guy."

"A good family man. Quiet. Always nice," Mr. Lopez said. "Speaks nice."

"I can't believe all this is happening," he added.

Mr. Hernandez was connected to the case earlier this month when another brother-in-law told authorities he had talked about killing a child and disposing of the body when he worked at the bodega. Two others close to him, a sister and a pastor, echoed the story to authorities.

The bodega, on West Broadway, has since become an optical store. A lawyer for owner Juan Santana declined to comment "because this matter is an active police investigation."

From the Archives

End of a Deep Dig Into Cold Case

Handyman Denies Patz Link

From 2010: DA Reopens Abduction Case

To those who remained in SoHo, and watched it transform from a shabby bohemian enclave into a chic shopping district, the bodega left little impression. Frank Genovese, the 55-year-old owner of Milady's bar nearby, recalled the store as "a grimy," somewhat Spartan space. "They had cock fights in the basement," he said.

In 1979, Mr. Hernandez worked at the store for about a month and lived in a small apartment on West Broadway, Mr. Kelly said.

According to computer records, Mr. Hernandez moved around southern New Jersey, living in different spots in Camden County near relatives before settling in Maple Shade. Neighbors said he arrived with his wife and teenage daughter about five years ago.

Dan Wollick, 71, a retired dump-truck driver who shares the two-toned duplex with the Hernandez family, said they aren't "close with any neighbors" but are polite and pleasant. They engaged in neighborly hellos and occasionally went beyond that: "They were nice people. If you were to ask them for something, a ride or something, they would give it to you."

He described them as model neighbors, keeping the grass trimmed and the driveway clear of snow. Mr. Hernandez's wife and daughter went to church regularly, and Mr. Hernandez joined them "occasionally."

On Thursday, the wife and daughter left the house with a small bag and a box of belongings and rode off in a blue sedan. They declined to comment.

—Alison Fox and Sean Gardiner contributed to this article.

A version of this article appeared May 25, 2012, on page A15 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Patz Suspect Long Lived A Quiet Life.

SmartMoney Glossary:

Pedro Hernandez, Etan Patz, Hernandez, Police Commissioner Ray Kelly, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly, Chuck Diehn, Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr., Hernandez family, Maple Shade Police Department

Online.wsj.com


This was Rafael Soriano’s first true test as the Yankees closer — because his first two save attempts were nothing like the assignment handed to him last night.

Soriano’s first save chance as Mariano Rivera’s replacement came on May 10 — when he had a three-run lead. Then his second save attempt came on May 14 — when he again had a three-run lead.

But Soriano took the mound last night in the ninth inning with just a single run separating the Yankees and Royals. He allowed the tying run to get to third base but no further, and closed out the Yankees’ 3-2 victory.

SUPER SAVER: Rafael Soriano delivers during the ninth inning last night on the way to recording the save in the Yankees’ 3-2 triumph over the Royals.

Neil Miller

SUPER SAVER: Rafael Soriano delivers during the ninth inning last night on the way to recording the save in the Yankees’ 3-2 triumph over the Royals.

“It’s exactly what he’s supposed to do,” David Robertson said.

Coincidentally, Rivera — out for the year with a torn ACL — was in the Yankees clubhouse yesterday for a visit.

Robertson is still on the disabled list with a strained left oblique but is planning to head to Tampa to rehab tomorrow. He’ll play catch initially and told The Post he’s shooting to return during the Yankees’ series in Detroit that starts a week from Friday.

Until Robertson returns, Soriano will surely be the closer — he may even continue to be when Robertson comes back, if manager Joe Girardi elects to do that.

Soriano’s now a perfect 3-for-3 in saves this season, and last night he was helped out by both luck and Alex Rodriguez.

Soriano opened the ninth against Jeff Francoeur, and the former Met drilled a shot to center. Fortunately for the Yankees, it was right at Curtis Granderson, who caught it for the first out. Alex Gordon then ripped a ground-rule double to right before Soriano induced Irving Falu to ground out to short as Gordon moved to third.

Soriano then got Alcides Escobar to ground out to Rodriguez, with A-Rod ranging toward the third-base line to grab the ball before gunning out Escobar by a hair to end the game.

The Yankees are extraordinarily fortunate they have the resources to have Soriano as a third closer. He’s making $11 million this season and posted 45 saves two years ago.

Still, it’s pretty difficult to envision a more challenging job than replacing Rivera for the Yankees.

“Maybe the shortstop. Other than that maybe, I don’t see a tougher spot to fill,” said last night’s starter, Phil Hughes. “But it’s going to happen eventually. That’s just the way this game is.”

Said Robertson, “Nobody can really replace Mariano. All you can do is do what you can.”

In his first one-run chance last night, Soriano delivered.

mark.hale@nypost.com

Mariano Rivera, Rafael Soriano, the Yankees, David Robertson online, Curtis Granderson, Alcides Escobar

Nypost.com


This is one VIP list that no one wants to be on.

Jailed hedge fund manager Raj Rajaratnam deemed only a handful of people — including ex-Goldman Sachs director Rajat Gupta — important enough to disturb his trading day, Rajaratnam’s former assistant testified yesterday in Manhattan federal court.

Carlyn Eisenberg, the government’s first witness in the trial of Gupta on insider-trading charges, said his name was on a “special list” of those whose calls she was to put through to her then-boss.

She said it was one of those calls in September 2008 that triggered a flurry of trading activity at Rajaratnam’s Galleon Group, shortly before Goldman Sachs announced it had landed a $5 billion investment from famed investor Warren Buffett.

Rajaratnam’s VIP list also included hedge-fund honcho Stan Druckenmiller, who announced his retirement from the business two years ago, and Danielle Chiesi, a former trader who pleaded guilty in the Galleon case.

Gupta, a former McKinsey & Co. head, is accused of tipping Rajaratnam to confidential information he gained as a director for Goldman and Procter & Gamble. Rajaratnam is serving 11 years in a federal prison in Massachusetts after his conviction on insider-trading charges last year.

Eisenberg recalled getting a call several years ago from a man whose voice she recognized as being on the list at the time, although she said she couldn’t identify it now as belonging to Gupta.

The call, which phone records later showed came from Gupta’s McKinsey & Co. office, arrived minutes before the close of markets on Sept. 23, 2008, according to Eisenberg.

The caller “said it was urgent and he needed to speak to Raj,” she told jurors.

After Rajaratnam took the call, he immediately brought Galleon co-founder Gary Rosenbach into his office. When Rosenbach emerged, he began making calls, saying, “buy Goldman Sachs,” Eisenberg testified.

Later that day, Goldman announced its board had approved the Buffett investment amid the depths of the financial crisis.

The defense countered that Rajaratnam had plenty of contacts at Goldman, including salesman David Loeb, who Eisenberg said was added to the list at a later date.

She documented the list in a red notebook under the words “Important People” highlighted in green marker, which was shown to the jury.

The defense also sought to prove its theory that there was more than one possible leaker, with an e-mail showing Rajaratnam went on a posh trip to Atlantic City in 2008 that included Goldman Sachs execs Gary Cohn and David Heller.

The trip also included Druckenmiller and fellow hedge-fund manager Paul Tudor Jones.

The group, minus Jones, planned to fly by helicopter from the West 30th heliport to AC, where they had a private room waiting for them with dinner and drinks at the Borgata. Jones would be making his own travel arrangements, according to the e-mail.

kwhitehouse@nypost.com

Raj Rajaratnam, Rajat Gupta, Goldman Sachs, Goldman Sachs, Galleon Group, ex-Goldman Sachs, Stan Druckenmiller, trading day, McKinsey & Co., Rajaratnam, Gary Rosenbach, Eisenberg, Eisenberg, Danielle Chiesi, Goldman

Nypost.com


At Summit, a Struggle for Consensus

Posted on 2012.05.23 at 11:24

CAMP DAVID, Md. -- Leaders of the Group of Eight major economies ended a weekend summit in which they struggled with little success to find agreement on next steps to calm the euro zone debt crisis, which poses a threat to the fragile U.S. recovery.

Among world leaders, consensus seemed to come more easily on ways to cushion the world from an Iranian oil embargo and other issues involving global security.

Meeting at the presidential retreat here, the G-8 leaders agreed that the euro-zone turmoil posed a critical threat to the global economy. But there were distinct signs of differences on the crucial question of how to resolve them.

In a joint statement Saturday, the G-8 leaders said they would take steps to boost their economies, while "recognizing that the right measures are not the same for each of us."

For U.S. President Barack Obama, who can do little more than nudge European leaders toward a solution, an economic crisis in Europe that spreads to the U.S. could be a devastating blow to his re-election campaign.

Nonetheless, Mr. Obama and leaders who favor a greater emphasis on policies that quickly produce jobs and growth over fiscal austerity portrayed the summit as a step forward, because their arguments gained greater stature.

"The direction the debate has taken lately should give us confidence," Mr. Obama said in a statement to reporters at the close of the summit. "There's now an emerging consensus that more must be done to promote growth and job creation right now in the context of these fiscal and structural reforms. That consensus for progress was strengthened at Camp David."

The new French president, François Hollande took satisfaction in the fact that the role of growth had been expanded in the economic discussion.

"In the name of France, I wanted to put growth at the heart of the debates, and make sure that growth, as well as budgetary discipline, could find its place in all meetings, at the G-8, at the European council, and at the G-20," Mr. Hollande told reporters at a press conference at Camp David.

Mr. Obama said the steps begun at Camp David would be expanded in future global meetings.

Photos: G-8 Leaders Meet

View Slideshow

[SB10001424052702303360504577413941470590630]

European Pressphoto Agency

G-8 leaders, from left, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti, Canada's Premier Stephen Harper, new French President Francois Hollande, U.S. President Barack Obama, British Prime Minister David Cameron, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, European Council president Herman van Rompuy and EU Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso focused on Iran, North Korea, Burma and Syria during the Friday night dinner.

More Coverage

Declaration From G-8 Leaders

Hollande Puts Growth on Agenda

Real Time Brussels: Merkel Scores a Point at Talks

U.S., France Talk Before Summit

Merkel Pressed, But Unlikely to Yield

Michael Froman, the White House deputy national security adviser for international economics who attended the day's sessions, said leaders showed "total consensus" that major economies needed to adjust their budgets and to boost growth.

Still, others who attended the sessions indicated that divisions remained about how specifically to deal with Greece and the currency union's broader debt woes.

Some in the group, including Mr. Hollande, wanted to send a strong signal to Greece that its future lay in remaining within the euro zone.

But other leaders accepted German Chancellor Angela Merkel's position that argued that if support for Greece was unequivocal, it risked sending the message that Greece could have a free ride without having to meet conditions attached to its bailout aid.

The result was a lukewarm summit statement afterward in which the leaders said, "We affirm our interest in Greece remaining in the euro zone, while respecting its commitments."

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European Pressphoto Agency

Leaders of the world's eight richest economies gathered in Camp David Saturday.

Despite the optimism expressed by the U.S. and French leaders, there was no sign of any concrete new initiative emerging from the meeting, in which non-euro-zone leaders recognized that decisive measures could only come from inside the currency bloc.

Before the meeting, British Prime Minister David Cameron said, "There is a growing sense of urgency that action needs to be taken, contingency plans need to be put in place and the strengthening of banks, governments, firewalls… need to take place very fast."

European Union leaders meet in Brussels on Wednesday for a summit aimed at pushing growth, in response to Mr. Hollande's election campaign and the urging of Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti. But no concrete new measures appear to be in the offing, and one senior European official said the meeting would likely be dominated by the "psycho-drama" of Greece.

The G-8 welcomed "the ongoing discussion in Europe on how to generate growth, while maintaining a firm commitment to implement fiscal consolidation."

For Mr. Obama, Ms. Merkel, the German leader, has been a key focus this weekend as Europe's chief driver of austerity and the continent's most powerful player in the euro-zone. Mr. Obama has prodded her in side conversations to ease her strict preference for budget-cutting as more of the Europe risks falling into recession.

The two held a formal one-on-one meeting Saturday evening after the conclusion of the summit.

Mr. Obama hoped that the setting at Camp David would encourage free-flowing discussion among the leaders as a long list of security and economic concerns threaten to flare up in the coming months. Aides said the leaders frequently pulled each other aside on Friday night and Saturday morning for one-on-one discussions.

The G-8, the largest ever gathering of world leaders at Camp David, began with a Friday night dinner focused on several hot-button security issues.

On Saturday, leaders addressed a series of such concerns. The G-8 leaders vowed to maintain pressure on Iran amid growing concerns about the country's nuclear program. But they acknowledged that new U.S. sanctions and a European Union embargo in the coming months risked disrupting global oil supplies further.

The G-8 nations said they "stand ready" to call on the International Energy Agency, which coordinates emergency oil stockpiles for major energy consumers, "to take appropriate action to ensure that the market is fully and timely supplied," according to a separate statement Saturday.

The G-8 agreement is intended "to provide assurance that we are determined to implement the sanctions fully," Mr. Froman said. "It's an important statement -- to the market, to consumers, to producers, to the Iranians -- that the G-8 has a common position that they are ready to act."

U.S. officials said the leaders negotiated the specific wording of the statement themselves while sitting around a circular wooden table, a task at international summits that's usually left to aides.

G-8 leaders' discussion on Syria focused on the need to move toward political transition, Ben Rhodes, a deputy national security adviser, told reporters Saturday. The U.S., he said, used Yemen as an example. Mr. Rhodes said Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev "did not dispute" the need for a political transition in Syria.

Mr. Obama said Saturday that the leaders are supportive of a plan put forward by United Nations envoy Kofi Annan, but that it "has to be fully implemented and that a political process has to move forward in a more timely fashion."

Many G-8 leaders will leave for Chicago Saturday night to attend a meeting of North Atlantic Treaty Organization members.

Afghanistan will be the primary focus of the two-day summit.

—Gabriele Parussini and Toko Sekiguchi contributed to this article.

Write to Carol E. Lee at carol.lee@wsj.com

SmartMoney Glossary:
Online.wsj.com


60 seconds with Dan Schawbel

Posted on 2012.05.22 at 15:21

Your firm, which studies Gen-Y workplace issues, surveyed over 200 employers about their hiring practices for college grads. Are internships important?

The problem is that employers are looking for multiple internships, yet half of them haven’t hired an intern in the past six months. And if you get an internship, most of these employers won’t hire you full time after that internship. It’s almost like a broken promise.

What are employers looking for in college grads?

The top three things are communications skills, positive attitude and teamwork skills — and a lot of students don’t have those skills. A lot of young people are really good at learning technology, but the one thing they lack is social skills. They rely too much on technology.

How can students develop them?

If you push yourself — go to networking events or career fairs or meet new people every day — you’re forced to learn those skills because you have to communicate. Get yourself offline. Call people. Join student organizations. Do philanthropy work.

What can really separate a student from the herd?

Start your own small business. Open an eBay store. Whatever you can do. You’ll get the marketing and sales skills interns don’t get. I’ve asked a few brand-name companies, “Would you rather hire someone who’s had five internships or someone who’s started their own business, failed or not?” And they go with the person who started the business.

How frustrated are college grads by the weak job market?

It’s a huge issue. The unemployment rate is so high for this generation, and then you add student debt. It’s definitely a hard time.

The way the economy is has forced people into this new mentality. Even though it seems like a bad thing, I think it’s a good wake-up call. Being prepared for the worst will give you a huge advantage in the future, because you’ll know how to react. The more you invest in yourself earlier on, the more it’s going to set you up for success later.

college grads, college grads, internships, social skills, communications skills, teamwork skills, employers, internship

Nypost.com


Through the Binocs

Posted on 2012.05.21 at 19:21

Saginaw continued to stamp himself as one of the best state-breds in training locally and one of the best claims of the year by drawing off to win the $100,000, Affirmed Success Stakes.

The David Jacobson trainee was under wraps as he crossed the wire, showing that the 7 1/2 length winning margin over Uncle T Seven was not indicative of the ease Saginaw won by.

Claimed by Drawing Away Stable on March 8 for $30,000 from Richard Dutrow Jr, Saginaw has now won the four starts since the claim.

Saginow ran the seven furlongs in 1:21.59 and he has now has won 11 of 27 starts with earnings of $449,990.

FOURTH RACE: Street Brawl made his way to the front and held off a challenge from Inflation Target to gain the victory.

There was a stewards’ inquiry and claim of foul by Alan Garcia on Inflation Target on Rosie Napravnik on Street Brawl for interference at the top of the stretch.

Replays showed Street Brawl ducking out after getting hit with the left-handed whip and bumping Inflation Target. But the stewards’ felt it wasn’t enough to warrant a disqualification so the result stood as is.

FIFTH RACE: Bombs away to start the Pick Six as 57-1 True Linnet was able to out finish Saturday At Ten and gain the victory by a neck. Saturday At Ten was squeezed in deep stretch between True Linnet and Coronation Day and only could get up to be second.

EIGHTH RACE: Rosie Napravnik won her fourth consecutive race on the card as she got favored Nice Stuff to gain the lead in midstretch and draw away for the victory.

Stray Bullet tried to close on the outside but was no match for the winner and ended up second best.

PICK SIX

Winning numbers

8-5-9-6-3-4

No winners

Consolation (5 of 6)

Paid $242.50

Carryover $31,879.03

Richard Dutrow Jr, Rosie Napravnik, Inflation Target, David Jacobson, Street Brawl, True Linnet, Saginaw, Alan Garcia

Nypost.com


Pitching Form

Posted on 2012.05.20 at 23:18

(Game time)

2012

'11 vs OPP

CAREER

LAST 3 STARTS

LINE

W-L

ERA

*REC

W-L

ERA

vs OPP

W-L

IP

ERA

*AHW

Reds

Cueto (R)

(1:05pm)

4-1

1.89

6-2

1-0

1.29

1-1

1-1

20.0

2.70

10.4

Yankees

Sabathia (L)

7-8

5-1

3.77

6-2

4-1

2-1

22.0

2.45

11.0

Mets

Gee (R)

(1:07pm)

2-3

5.65

3-4

0-0

0-1

17.0

6.88

13.8

Blue Jays

Alvarez (R)

7 1/2-8 1/2

3-3

2.62

3-5

0-0

2-1

22.2

1.19

10.7

Cardinals

Lohse (R)

(8:05pm)

5-1

2.70

7-1

1-1

8.71

2-3

1-1

16.2

4.86

13.5

Dodgers

Bllngsley (R)

Pick

2-3

3.83

4-4

0-0

0.00

1-3

0-2

14.0

6.43

20.6

Marlins

Johnson (R)

(1:05pm)

1-3

5.36

4-4

0-0

1-0

16.2

5.40

11.9

Indians

Lowe (R)

Pick

6-1

2.05

6-2

1-1

2.37

8-5

2-0

21.0

1.71

13.3

Pirates

Correia (R)

(1:05pm)

1-4

4.50

2-5

1-0

2.70

1-0

0-3

17.2

7.13

15.3

Tigers

Scherzer (R)

8-9

2-3

6.26

4-4

0-1

4.76

1-1

1-0

17.1

4.15

11.4

Red Sox

Beckett (R)

(1:35pm)

3-4

4.97

3-4

0-1

7.50

8-5

1-2

16.0

5.63

13.5

Phillies

Lee (L)

6 1/2-7 1/2

0-1

1.95

1-4

1-0

0.00

3-4

0-0

24.0

1.13

7.1

Orioles

Chen (L)

(1:35pm)

4-0

2.45

6-1

0-0

2-0

19.2

2.75

9.6

Nationals

Strasburg (R)

7-8

3-1

2.25

6-2

0-0

1-1

16.0

4.50

11.8

Braves

Hudson (R)

(1:40pm)

2-1

3.96

3-1

7-1

1-1

20.0

4.05

11.3

Rays

Price (L)

6-7

6-2

3.10

6-2

1-0

2-1

22.0

3.68

9.8

Rangers

Lewis (R)

8-9

3-3

3.63

4-4

1-0

1.32

2-1

0-3

19.1

6.52

12.6

Astros

Lyles (R)

(2:05pm)

0-0

3.00

0-2

0-1

5.54

0-1

0-0

12.0

3.00

10.5

Twins

Marquis (R)

(2:10pm)

2-3

6.68

2-4

1-1

4.15

6-10

0-3

15.0

7.20

18.6

Brewers

Greinke (R)

9-11

4-1

2.88

6-2

0-0

6.00

3-8

1-0

20.1

1.33

6.6

D'Backs

Miley (L)

5 1/2-6 1/2

4-1

2.52

4-1

0-0

1-1

18.1

3.93

14.7

Royals

Adcock (R)

(2:10pm)

0-1

2.51

0-0

0-0

---

---

----

----

White Sox

Peavy (R)

5 1/2-6 1/2

4-1

2.65

5-3

1-0

5.06

6-2

1-0

20.0

4.50

12.2

Cubs

Maholm (L)

(2:20pm)

4-2

4.35

4-3

1-1

2-0

19.0

2.37

9.0

Mariners

Beavan (R)

(3:10pm)

1-4

4.58

3-4

0-0

0-2

12.1

6.57

14.6

Rockies

Guthrie (R)

7-8

2-1

4.85

4-1

0-1

0.00

2-5

1-1

19.1

3.26

11.6

Athletics

Colon (R)

(4:05pm)

3-4

4.13

4-5

1-1

0-2

14.0

9.00

19.9

Giants

Lincecum (R)

7-8

2-3

5.77

2-6

1-1

1.20

5-1

0-1

17.0

5.82

13.8

Angels

Santana (R)

6-7

2-6

4.36

2-6

1-0

2-1

23.0

1.96

8.2

Padres

Bass (R)

(4:05pm)

2-4

2.87

2-5

0-0

1-1

19.2

3.66

11.4

* REC: Won-lost record of pitcher's team in games he has started.

* AHW: Average total of hits and walks yielded per nine innings.
Nypost.com


Business briefs

Posted on 2012.05.20 at 03:18

Rundown

Former Red Sox hurler Curt Schilling must seek private financing to keep his video game company 38 Studios afloat. The studio earlier this month failed to make a $1.125 million payment to Rhode Island on a $75 million loan. The payment was ultimately made, but RI Gov. Lincoln Chafee implemented changes that prevent 38 Studios from receiving any additional financial help from the state.

Kayak ready

Travel search company Kayak.com, which has been putting off its plans to go public for more than a year and a half, is now getting ready to pull the trigger.

Janney

Midsize broker Janney Montgomery Scott expects to increase its total advisers by 5 percent to 10 percent annually.

Empire blues

New York’s jobless rate rose to 8.5 percent, marking the third month in a row in which it was the sole state with an unemployment rate higher than the previous year, the Labor Dept. said.

Cheaper java

Kraft Foods lowered prices on many of its US coffees, including Maxwell House.

Reuters

Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click For Restrictions

Lincoln Chafee, Curt Schilling, 38 Studios, Red Sox, Janney Montgomery Scott, Rhode Island, Labor Dept.

Nypost.com


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